GST Composition Scheme for Creators: 1% vs 18% Complete Guide
Should you choose composition (1% tax, quarterly filing) or regular scheme (18% tax, ITC)? Break-even analysis, B2B vs B2C implications, annual savings, and switching process
- Composition Rate: 1% of turnover vs 18% under regular scheme (for service providers it is 6%)
- Best For: Creators with expense ratio below 40% working with intra-state clients
- Not Suitable If: You work with national brands (inter-state sales not allowed)
- Break-Even Point: If expenses exceed 94.5% of revenue, regular scheme is better due to ITC
- Deadline: Opt in by March 31st for next financial year via Form GST CMP-02
As a content creator registered for GST, choosing between the composition scheme and regular scheme can save you lakhs in taxes and countless hours in compliance work. While the regular scheme charges 18% GST, the composition scheme offers a simplified alternative at just 1% tax rate for services. But is it right for your creator business? This comprehensive guide breaks down everything you need to know to make an informed decision.
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Understanding the GST Composition Scheme
The GST Composition Scheme is a simplified tax regime designed for small businesses and service providers with turnover up to Rs. 1.5 crore. Instead of the standard 18% GST rate on services, you pay a flat 1% on your total turnover. The trade-off? You cannot charge GST to clients, cannot claim Input Tax Credit (ITC), and must file returns quarterly instead of monthly.
Tax Rate
1%
On total turnover (vs 18% in regular scheme)
Filing Frequency
Quarterly
GSTR-4 + CMP-08 (vs monthly GSTR-1 & GSTR-3B)
Turnover Limit
Rs. 1.5 Cr
Annual turnover cap for eligibility
No ITC
Cannot Claim
Input Tax Credit on business purchases
Composition Scheme vs Regular Scheme: Complete Comparison
| Feature | Composition Scheme | Regular Scheme |
|---|---|---|
| Tax Rate | 1% of turnover | 18% on services |
| Turnover Limit | Up to Rs. 1.5 crore | No limit |
| Filing Frequency | Quarterly (GSTR-4) | Monthly (GSTR-1, GSTR-3B) |
| Input Tax Credit | Not Available | Available |
| Can Charge GST to Clients? | No - Cannot collect GST | Yes - Must charge 18% |
| Inter-State Supply | Not Permitted | Permitted |
| B2B Sales (GST-registered clients) | Disadvantage (clients can't claim ITC) | Advantage (clients can claim ITC) |
| Compliance Burden | Low | High |
| E-commerce Services | Not Allowed | Allowed |
Important Restriction
Break-Even Analysis: When Does Composition Make Sense?
The critical factor in choosing between schemes is your business expense ratio. Let's break down the mathematics to help you decide.
Composition Scheme is Better When:
Turnover × 1% < (Turnover × 18%) - (Expenses × 18%)
Simplified: Expense Ratio < 5.55%
Wait, That Seems Too Low!
You're right. The pure mathematical break-even is at 5.55% expense ratio. However, the practical decision point is different because composition scheme saves you significant compliance time and hassle. Most creators find value up to 30-40% expense ratio when factoring in time savings and reduced compliance burden.
Detailed Break-Even Scenarios
Composition Scheme
Regular Scheme
Composition Scheme
Regular Scheme
Composition Scheme
Regular Scheme
The Critical Decision Factor: Do you work with national brands or mostly local businesses? Composition scheme prohibits inter-state supply - if your Mumbai client pays you from their Delhi headquarters, that's inter-state and you can't use composition. Most content creators working with big brands need regular scheme. Read our complete GST guide for content creators for more context.
Annual Savings Examples: Different Business Models
| Creator Type | Turnover | Expenses | Composition Tax | Regular Tax | Annual Savings |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Micro-Influencer | Rs. 25,00,000 | Rs. 2,00,000 (8%) | Rs. 25,000 | Rs. 4,14,000 | Rs. 3,89,000 |
| Fashion Blogger | Rs. 40,00,000 | Rs. 8,00,000 (20%) | Rs. 40,000 | Rs. 5,76,000 | Rs. 5,36,000 |
| Travel Vlogger | Rs. 1,00,00,000 | Rs. 30,00,000 (30%) | Rs. 1,00,000 | Rs. 12,60,000 | Rs. 11,60,000 |
| Tech Reviewer | Rs. 80,00,000 | Rs. 45,00,000 (56%) | Rs. 80,000 | Rs. 6,30,000 | -Rs. 5,50,000 (Loss) |
| Comedy Creator | Rs. 1,20,00,000 | Rs. 15,00,000 (12.5%) | Rs. 1,20,000 | Rs. 18,90,000 | Rs. 17,70,000 |
| Production House | Rs. 1,50,00,000 | Rs. 90,00,000 (60%) | Rs. 1,50,000 | Rs. 10,80,000 | -Rs. 9,30,000 (Loss) |
Key Takeaway
B2B vs B2C: Client Type Matters
Beyond pure tax calculations, the type of clients you work with significantly impacts which scheme is better for you.
Typical Income Sources:
- Small local brand partnerships
- Direct sponsorships from unregistered businesses
- Individual paid promotions
- Regional restaurant/shop reviews
Why Composition Works:
Your clients don't need GST invoices and can't claim ITC anyway. You save on tax (1% vs 18% effective) and compliance time.
Typical Income Sources:
- National brand campaigns
- Corporate events/speaking
- Agency-mediated brand deals
- Enterprise consulting/training
Why Regular Scheme:
GST-registered brands prefer working with regular scheme taxpayers so they can claim ITC. Your composition invoices (without GST) may lose you high-value deals.
Critical Business Consideration
Transition Process: Switching Between Schemes
You're not locked into your choice forever. Here's how to switch between regular and composition schemes.
From Regular to Composition Scheme
Timing Window
File Form GST CMP-02 before the start of the financial year (by March 31st for April 1st enrollment). You cannot switch mid-year.
Eligibility Check
Ensure your turnover doesn't exceed Rs. 1.5 crore and you don't plan inter-state supplies or e-commerce services.
ITC Reversal
Reverse any input tax credit on stock/capital goods. Calculate closing stock ITC and pay back to government via Form GST ITC-03.
Intimation to Department
Submit Form GST CMP-02 on the GST portal. No approval needed - it's a self-declaration.
Start Filing Quarterly
From the new financial year, file GSTR-4 (quarterly) and CMP-08 (quarterly challan) instead of monthly returns.
From Composition to Regular Scheme
Voluntary vs Mandatory Switch
Voluntary: File Form GST CMP-04 before the start of the financial year.
Mandatory: If turnover exceeds Rs. 1.5 crore or you make inter-state supply, you must switch immediately (within 7 days).
Stock ITC Calculation
You can claim ITC on stock held on the date of switching. Calculate tax-paid value and claim via Form GST ITC-01.
Update Invoicing System
Start charging 18% GST to all clients from the effective date. Update invoice templates to show CGST/SGST or IGST.
Monthly Filing Starts
File GSTR-1 (sales) and GSTR-3B (summary + payment) monthly from the effective date. Annual return GSTR-9 also becomes mandatory.
Lock-In Period
Frequently Asked Questions
No. Composition scheme prohibits inter-state supply. If your client is based in a different state than your GSTIN registration state, you cannot use composition scheme. This is a major limitation for most content creators who work with national brands headquartered in other states (e.g., Mumbai-based brands working with Delhi creators).
You must immediately switch to regular scheme from the day your turnover exceeds Rs. 1.5 crore. File Form GST CMP-04 within 7 days, start charging 18% GST to clients, and begin monthly filing. The switch is mandatory, not optional.
No. Under composition scheme, you cannot collect GST from clients. Your invoices will show the service amount only. The 1% tax is paid by you from your pocket, not collected from clients. This is why brands prefer regular scheme taxpayers - they want to pay 18% GST and claim ITC.
No. Export services (like YouTube AdSense from Google Ireland, Patreon, etc.) don't count toward the composition scheme turnover limit. Only domestic taxable supplies (Indian brand deals, Indian course sales, etc.) count. However, if you earn from exports, you still cannot use composition for your domestic supplies if they're inter-state.
This is an income tax question, not GST. Yes, you can claim depreciation on equipment for income tax purposes regardless of your GST scheme. However, under composition, you cannot claim GST input tax credit on the equipment purchase. So a Rs. 1,18,000 camera purchase (Rs. 1L + Rs. 18K GST) only gives you income tax depreciation on Rs. 1,18,000, but you lose the Rs. 18K GST benefit.
If you opt for composition when ineligible (e.g., making inter-state supplies), you'll be treated as regular scheme taxpayer from day one. You'll have to pay 18% GST on all supplies, file monthly returns retrospectively, and may face penalties up to 10% of tax due plus interest @ 18% per annum. Always ensure you meet all eligibility criteria before opting.
Yes, if you have GST registrations in multiple states (different GSTINs), you can opt for composition in one state and regular in another. For example, if you have a GSTIN in Maharashtra for local brand work (composition) and another GSTIN in Karnataka for a branch office (regular), both are independent.
No. The law explicitly prohibits composition scheme for suppliers who make taxable supplies through e-commerce operators. If you sell merchandise or digital products through e-commerce platforms, you must use regular scheme. However, if you only sell services directly (not through platforms), composition is allowed.
Your invoice must mention: "Composition taxable person, not eligible to collect tax on supplies" in a prominent place. Do not show any GST amount or breakup. Invoice format: Service Description - Rs. X (total amount). You pay the 1% tax yourself through CMP-08 challan quarterly.
This question is moot because composition scheme taxpayers can only make intra-state supplies (within the same state). Export services by definition are to foreign entities, which don't have a GST registration in India. In practice, if you have export income, you'd remain under regular scheme (even if turnover is below Rs. 1.5 crore) to file LUT and zero-rate exports properly.
File Form GST CMP-02 by March 31, 2025 to opt for composition scheme from April 1, 2025. You cannot switch mid-year. Mark your calendar for late March if you're planning to switch. For new registrations, you can opt for composition at the time of registration itself via Form GST REG-01.
Technically yes, but it doesn't make practical sense. Foreign clients are export supplies, which are zero-rated (0% GST) under regular scheme anyway. Composition scheme doesn't give you any benefit for exports. More importantly, if you have domestic clients in other states, you can't use composition (inter-state supply prohibition). Most creators with mixed domestic and foreign income stay on regular scheme for flexibility.
Decision Framework: Which Scheme Should You Choose?
- Your business expenses are less than 40% of turnover
- You work primarily with B2C clients or small unregistered businesses
- All your domestic clients are in your own state (no inter-state deals)
- Your turnover is below Rs. 1.5 crore and likely to stay there
- You value time savings and simpler compliance over ITC benefits
- You use minimal professional services or equipment with GST component
- Your business expenses exceed 40% of turnover (high ITC benefit)
- You work with GST-registered corporate brands who need ITC
- You have clients across multiple states (inter-state supply)
- Your turnover exceeds Rs. 1.5 crore or will soon
- You make significant equipment purchases, hire agencies, rent studio space
- You sell through e-commerce platforms (Amazon, Flipkart, etc.)
- You want flexibility to scale without switching schemes mid-growth
Conclusion
The GST composition scheme can save content creators lakhs annually, but only if it fits your business model. The key factors to evaluate are:
- Expense Ratio: Below 40% favors composition; above 40% favors regular scheme
- Client Type: B2C/local clients suit composition; B2B/corporate clients need regular
- Geography: Intra-state only for composition; multi-state requires regular
- Turnover Trajectory: Stable below Rs. 1.5Cr suits composition; growing fast needs regular
- Time Value: Quarterly filing saves 30+ hours annually vs monthly compliance
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